Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Putignano, Italy

    Angelo Sabatelli

    500pts

    Serious Apulian cooking, small room, easy booking.

    Angelo Sabatelli, Restaurant in Putignano

    About Angelo Sabatelli

    Angelo Sabatelli is the strongest fine dining case for stopping in Putignano rather than passing through. The €€€ modern creative menu draws on Apulian seasonal produce, served in an intimate 16th-century vaulted stone room with one of the most serious wine cellars in the region — around 3,000 labels. Book for Saturday dinner or Sunday lunch; Tuesday to Thursday is the easiest window.

    Verdict

    Angelo Sabatelli is the kind of restaurant that rewards the effort it takes to find it. Tucked into the historic center of Putignano — a Baroque town in the Valle d'Itria that most visitors pass through rather than stop in — this Michelin-recognized address delivers creative, Apulia-rooted cuisine in a 16th-century stone setting that very few dining rooms in southern Italy can match for atmosphere. If you are already in Puglia and serious about food, this is worth planning your evening around. If you are not yet in Puglia, it is not quite a reason on its own to fly in , but it does belong on the shortlist alongside Reale in Castel di Sangro for anyone building a serious southern Italian itinerary.

    The Room

    The physical space is the first thing you should understand before booking. Angelo Sabatelli operates out of a 16th-century building with a vaulted stone ceiling, a fireplace, and a small number of tables arranged in an elongated dining room. This is not a large restaurant. The architecture does the heavy work: exposed stone, low arches, candlelight that reflects off the ceiling in a way that no designed interior can fully replicate. If intimacy and a sense of place matter to you , and at this price tier they should , the room earns its place on that basis alone. Parties looking for a lively, high-energy evening should note that the scale here is deliberately quiet. Go with someone you want to talk to.

    The Food and When to Go

    The cuisine is described as modern and creative with Apulian foundations , which in practice means regional ingredients and techniques reframed through a contemporary lens. Puglia's larder is seasonally pronounced: spring brings wild greens, broad beans, and early artichokes; summer moves toward tomatoes, peppers, and fresh seafood from the Adriatic; autumn shifts to mushrooms, truffles from the adjacent hills, and aged cheeses. Winter is the quietest season and, for some, the most atmospheric , the fireplace is functional, the room is warmer, and the menu tends toward richer, slower preparations. If you are visiting Puglia primarily in summer, the coastal produce focus makes July and August a strong window. For the full seasonal contrast , and to see the room at its most characterful , October through early December is worth considering. The restaurant is closed on Mondays, operates dinner only Tuesday through Saturday (7:30 PM to 9:30 PM), and offers a rare Sunday lunch service (12:30 PM to 2:00 PM). That Sunday lunch slot is worth flagging: it is the only midday service of the week, which makes it the easier booking for anyone passing through the region on a weekend itinerary.

    The Wine

    Sommelier Daniele Sabatelli , who runs the front of house , oversees a cellar that spans approximately 3,000 labels across two volumes, which is a serious collection for a restaurant of this size operating outside a major city. For context, a cellar of this depth in a small Puglian town is genuinely notable. If wine pairing is important to your meal, this is one of the better-positioned addresses in the region for it. Puglia's native varieties , Primitivo, Negroamaro, Fiano Minutolo , are worth exploring through that pairing, particularly if you are less familiar with southern Italian producers. See our full Putignano wineries guide for more regional context.

    Booking

    Booking here is rated Easy by Pearl standards. Given the small size of the room, early reservations are still advisable , particularly for Saturday dinner and the Sunday lunch service, both of which fill faster than weeknight slots. The Tuesday-to-Thursday window offers the most flexibility if your schedule allows it. There is no online booking information in our current data; contact directly via the address at Via S. Chiara, 1, Putignano. Check our full Putignano restaurants guide for updated contact details as they become available.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Recommended, particularly for Saturday dinner and Sunday lunch. Tuesday to Thursday is the easiest window. Hours: Tuesday–Saturday 7:30 PM–9:30 PM; Sunday 12:30 PM–2:00 PM; closed Monday. Price tier: €€€ (modern creative cuisine at this level in Puglia typically runs €80–€150 per head before wine; confirm current pricing when booking). Address: Via S. Chiara, 1, 70017 Putignano BA, Italy. Getting there: Putignano is approximately 40 km south of Bari; a car is the most practical option. See our Putignano experiences guide and hotels guide if you are planning an overnight stay.

    Who Should Book

    Angelo Sabatelli works leading for two people, a couple, or a small group of four who want a serious meal in an atmospheric setting without the theatre and scale of a destination restaurant like Osteria Francescana in Modena. If you are already in the Valle d'Itria , visiting Alberobello, Locorotondo, or Martina Franca , this is the obvious dinner booking. If you are building a Puglia wine and food trip, pair it with an evening exploring the bar scene in Putignano for a complete picture of what the town offers. Those looking for a more coastal experience in southern Italy might compare against Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone for a Mediterranean-facing alternative.

    How It Compares

    Compare Angelo Sabatelli

    Is Angelo Sabatelli Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Angelo SabatelliEasy
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler€€€€Unknown
    Dal Pescatore€€€€Unknown
    Osteria Francescana€€€€Unknown
    Quattro Passi€€€€Unknown
    Reale€€€€Unknown

    How Angelo Sabatelli stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Angelo Sabatelli?

    No bar seating is available. Angelo Sabatelli operates from a small, intimate dining room inside a 16th-century vaulted space in Putignano's historic center — the format is table service only. If you want a more casual perch for a glass from the 3,000-label cellar, this is not the right venue for that.

    What should a first-timer know about Angelo Sabatelli?

    The room is small and the setting is genuinely atmospheric — a vaulted stone ceiling, a fireplace, a handful of tables in a 16th-century building. Sommelier Daniele Sabatelli runs the front of house and manages one of the most seriously stocked wine cellars in the region, so coming with an interest in wine pays off. Service runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings plus Sunday lunch, and Monday is closed; plan accordingly if you're travelling specifically to eat here.

    Does Angelo Sabatelli handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary policy is documented for Angelo Sabatelli. For a creative modern tasting menu format in a small restaurant, the practical advice is to communicate any restrictions clearly at the time of booking — not at the door. Apulian cuisine is largely vegetable-forward and seafood-driven by tradition, which works in favour of most common requests, but confirm directly.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Angelo Sabatelli?

    Dinner gives you more availability — service runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings from 7:30 PM. Sunday lunch (12:30–2:00 PM) is the only midday option and runs one sitting per week, which makes it the harder slot to secure. If the Sunday lunch window fits your itinerary, it is worth pursuing for the atmosphere alone; otherwise, a Friday or Saturday dinner is the practical choice.

    What are alternatives to Angelo Sabatelli in Putignano?

    Putignano does not have a deep bench of comparable fine dining options at Angelo Sabatelli's level. If you want creative modern Italian cooking in the broader Puglia region, Dal Pescatore (Canneto sull'Oglio) and Reale (Castel di Sangro) represent the national benchmark but require more significant travel. For something closer in spirit and geography, look within the Valle d'Itria — Ostuni and Fasano have strong options — rather than staying in Putignano itself.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Wednesday
    7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Thursday
    7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Friday
    7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Saturday
    7:30 PM-9:30 PM
    Sunday
    12:30 PM-2 PM

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Angelo Sabatelli on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.